Today's Features

The Tedders were married on Aug. 30, 1958, at Roley Christian Church in Roley, Ky. The Rev. T.R. Bledsoe performed the ceremony while Charles and Marjorie Campbell of Campbellsville were the attendants.

The couple have two sons and daughters-in-law, Evan and Elizabeth Tedder and Kent and Michelle Tedder, all of Bowling Green. They also have six grandchildren and six great-grandchildren, all of Bowling Green.

The Taylor County Junior Miss Committee has announced that the Campbellsville Rotary Club is sponsoring the 2009 "Be Your Best Self" Award to be given away Saturday night at the Taylor County Junior Miss Scholarship Program at Hamilton Auditorium.

The Campbellsville Rotary Club was organized in 1937 and over the last 70 years has provided meaningful service to the Campbellsville/Taylor County community. The club has long held a special interest in supporting young people and has provided several thousands of dollars in college scholarships over the years.

From the Heart will be in concert Sunday at 6:30 p.m. at Campbellsville Christian Church. From the Heart sings throughout Central Kentucky and is featured annually at the July Fourth Celebration in Campbellsville. The group is composed of Gail Godsey, Krisinda Jeffries, Darlene Netherland, Debbie Lawson and Linda Mings. The concert is free and the community is welcome to attend.

Dylan, 5, and Jay Morrison, 3, are the children of Darrell and Mary Morrison of Campbellsville. Their grandparents are Phil and Ruth Ann Vittitow of Louisville, Ruth Thompson of Somerset and the late RL Thompson. Great-grandparent is Alva Morrison of Greensburg.

Every summer, the Christian Bookseller's Association has a huge trade show where book publishers and sellers of religious gifts congregate and attempt to ply their wares to owners of Christian bookstores and gift shops.

It's been a few years since I attended one, and even though this year's show was in nearby Orlando, I was out of town and didn't go.

Consequently, I missed one of the most exquisitely enjoyable aspects of this trade show - the rows of Christian witness items, snarkily referred to by the publishing side of the building as "Jesus junk alley."